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Metabolism pathways - Biochem Semester 2

How does blood glucose levels vary through the day

After eating there will be high levels of blood glucose and then if not eat for a while then there will be lower levels of blood glucose
Can use glycogen to maintain a stable blood glucose whgen we arent eating like when sleeping as glycogen is a short term emergency store of glucose

What is the structure of glycogen

It is the animal version of starch as it is a branched polymer of glucose by glycosidic bond that are between the C1 and C4 of glucose and there are branches when glucose bonded by C1 and C6
The main chain is an alpha 1,4 C chain and is alpha due to oxygen below the chain

It will form a helical structure and there will be 12-14 glucose per chain and branching every 8-12

It will be stored in the liver as glycogen granuoles and can tgere be converted to glucose during blood glucose homeostasis

What is glycogenolysis

This is the breakdown of glycogen to glucose

What is the 1st step of glycogenolysis

This is where the glycogen has a glucose 1 phosphate removed from the chain
This is done by phosphorlysis which is the breaking of the glycosidic bond by adding a phosphate ion to make the glucose 1 phosphate, it is done via phosphorylsis so that there is no ATP wasted

What is the phosphorylase active site

There is a deep cleft active site called pyridoxal phosphate where there are 3 isozymers of it all having a slighlty different function due to being in the muscle, liver or brain respectivley

How is phosphorlysis a progressivce enzyme

Due to being a processive enzyme it wont let go of the glycoegn once on glycosidic bond has been broken but will keep going along the chain
This means due to the enzyme procession and branched glycogen structure then there will rapid glucose mobilisation

What can phosphorylase not do

It cant break the alpha 1-4 or 1-6 bonds due to being hindered by the branch that will prevent it getting further down the chain and so prevent 4 glucose molecules being remopved from the branch point
This can lead to dextrin molecules being formed from glycogen being digested as far as it can be

Why is a debranching enzyme needed

This is too prevent the dextrin formation and it will tranfer 3 glucose molecules from the branch on the glycogen to a different place so that it can then be accessed by the phosphorylase
Then also need alpha 1-6 glucosidase to then hydrolyse the final single glucose of the branch chain so that then glycogen is 1 long straight chain so then whoel chain can be turned to glucose 1 phosphate

How is glucose 1 phosphate turned to glucose 6 phosphate

This is done by the enzyme phospoglucomutase
The 1 step will be to enter the active site and tnr serine will add a phosphate to C6 to leave a 2 phosphate intermediate molecule

The enzyme will then be restored due to the phosphate from C1 will go back to the serine so step can happen again

This then make glucose 6 phosphate that can then enter glycolysis to produce glucose

What are the entrances to glycolysis

In the muscles there is glycohen to go to glycolysis to then make ATP for muscle contraction
In the liver the glycogen to gluconeogensis to create new glucose from glucose 6 phosphate to then increase the blood glucose

How is glucose 6 phosphate turned to glucose

In the liver cells there is the enzyme glucose 6 phosphatas ethat cut off the phosphate from the molecule to make glucose
There are 3 glucose + 3 Pi per cycle in the enzyme and then tbhe glucose released to the blood via transportters in the liver membrane

There are 3 transporters: 1 to bring in glucose 6 Phosphate to the liver, 1 for the removal of the Pi from the liver and 1 for the removal of the glucose to the blood

What happens when blood glucose is too high

After a meal there will be high blood glucose and so the gluvose is converted to glucose 6 phosphate that then go to glucose 1 phosphate to then go the glycogen

What is Mcardle disease

This is where the production of glycogen is prevented yet there is still glycogen in the liver
This is due to the phosphate concentration in the cell is higher than the glucose 6 phosphate so will always go glucose 6 phosphate to glucose 1 phosphate

What actually happens during glycogenesis

Glucose is converted to glucose 6 phosphate by the enzyme reversed of phosphoglucomutase
The glucose 6 phosphate then converted to UDP- glucose due to the UTP has 2 phosphate ions released by the enzyme UDP glucose pyrophosphorylase

There is then glucose activation where the glucose 1 phosphate + UTP --> UDP glucose

UDP glucose is then attached to the glycogen by glycogen synthase and will be added to current chaain by alpha 1-4 bond and then the UDP will be released

How is glycogen initiation done

Glycogenin is where build the initial 8 unit primer that is the extended by glycogen synthase
Branching enzyme - Bind to chains that are 11+ long and cut off heptamer of glucose units to then reattach via alpahg 1-6 bond by glycosyltranferase

There is a reattachment site 4 units from any previous branch point

What are fats

These group all the hydrophobic molecules and any fat soluble molecules and they are rich in triglyerides
They are solid at room temp and if its an oil will be liquid at room temp, this is due to contain different type of triglycerides

What is the structure of a fat

There are 3 fatty acid tail that ar then ester linked to a glycerol backbone
The fatty acid tails can be saturated or unsaturated and the more double bonds then the lower melting point so more likely to be an oil than fat

Cis hydrocarbons have a kink in the chain due to where the chain on the same side of C=C and trans have no kink due to long chain on opposite side of C=C

How are fatty acid converted

Elongases are used to increase the lenght of by 2 carbons and desaturases are used add carbon bonds to the hydrocarbon chain
Humans dont have the essential desaturases to add a C=C lower than omega 9

Omega 3 + 9 fats have to come from the siyte and so the human essential fats as cant be made by conversion

They can be elongated and then have to be further desaturated after that

Why do we need to convert fatty acids

There is not a need to alter for energy purposes but more to allow the phospholipid membrane to carry out its function as the fatty acid length will vary membrane thickness as well as level of saturation for the levels of membrane fluidity
Some FA need to be altered so they can be a precursor to signalling molecules

How are fatty acids digested

The majority of lipids in food come in the form of the triglycerides
They are digested by lipases in the pancreas that break the ester bond of the 1+3 fatty acid to the glycerol so then leave a monoglyceride and 2 free fatty acids chains

What happens to digested triglycerides

They are then re-esterified back to triglyceries in the gut mucosa
For this to happen there has to be they have to be activated by using co enzyme A before then being attached to glycerol

The CoA is a temporary way to provide energy to activate the FA that can then bind to the glycerol in the gut

How is the CoA atached to the fatty acid

This is done by the enzyeme acyl CoA synthetase and will remove a water molecule to do this as well as turn ATP to ADP

What are Lipoproteins

This is a mixture of lipid and proteins where there is a phospholipid and cholesterol outer layer and then triglyceride core
There are also A,B,C,D,E apolipoproteins present as well

The transport of them from the gut to the adipose tissue uses cholomicrons

How are fatty acids uptaken

Endothelial cells haev lipoprotein lipase that diegst lipids in the lipoproteins
All 3 of the fatty acids will be cut from the glycerol and then will diffuse into the adipose tissue to then be used in the cells and tissue

How can there be triglyceride formation in the adipose tissuse

This will start with 1x glycerol 3 phosphate and then 3 activated Fatty acids that have been absorbed by the adipose tissue
The Glycerol 3 phosphate will come from DHAP during glycolysis

This is done with the enzyme G3P Dehydrogenase and needs the oxidation of NADH to NAD+

Then the activated fatty acids tails are the added 1 by 1 to the Glycerol 3 phosphate

This is done by the enzyme G3P acyltransgerase so then produce Lysophosphatidic acid + the coenzyme A

The next fatty acid is then added by 1acyl G3P acyltranferase to then produce the Phosphatidic acid + the coenzyme A

Then the Phosphatidic acid is dephosphorlated to then produce Diacylglycerol by the enzyme phosphatidic acid phosphatase

Then the final fatty acid is then added diacylglycerol tranferase to make the triglyceride

How are fatty acids dense energy stores

This is due to when glucose is converted to glycoegn there is also the prodution of 2x water molecules
When fatty acids are turned to triglycerides then there is no water created

This means denser energy store due to no space taken up by water that you cant get energy from

How are fatty acids stored

They are stored as triglycerides in adipose tissue that are able to swell up to store more energy as fatty acids and each lipid droplet is surrounded by a shell of perilipin to prevent them being released

How do you release a fatty acid energy when in adipose tissue

To gain access to the fatty acid need to phosphorylate the perilipin coating to allow enzyme to get to the triglyceride in the lipid droplet
The triglyceride can then bind to enzyme to cut off 1 fatty acid tail to form diglyceride than then bind to another enzyme to release next fatty acid tail to form monoglyceride that then bind to last enzyme to form glycerol + 3 fatty acids by 3 different lipases for each step

How to release fatty acids into blood

This can be done due to bidn to HSA as it is insoluble to move in the blood on its own
The HSA will move the fatty acid from high conc in the adipose tissue to lower concentration areas in other body areas and they can then enter cells that have low concentration and go to the mitochondria outer membrane where they become activated

How does the fatty acid become activated when on outer membrane of mitochondria

This is a 2 step reaction:
1st step = Fatty acid + ATP --> Acly Adenylate + Phosphate group

2nd step = Acyl Adenylate + HS coenzyme A --> Acyl CoA + AMP

The conversion of AMP to the uselful ADP needs another ATP so there is an overall net loss of 2 ATP per reaction

How can the activate fatty acid enter the mitochondria

Acyl CoA is produced as it is able to pass through the outer membrane via a channel
The CoA is then replaced by Carnitinine in order to then cross the inner membrane into the matrix by Carnitine AcylTransferase 1

Acyl-Carnitine is then transported across the bilayer by translocase antiporter to then bind to the acyl-carnitine tranferase 2 to then remove the carnitine and replace it withy CoA to remake the Acyl-CoA from the start

Once in the matrix this can then feed acyl CoA to Acetyl CoA to start TCA cycle

What is Beta oxidation

This is the taking of fatty acids and feeding them into the TCA cycle
The fatty acids are catabolised in 2C units due to acetly being a 2C compound

The first cleavge will be next to the beta Carbon to then release acetly CoA to TCA cycle

The CoA then put back onto the new cleaved chain for the process to happen again

How to break to Beta Carbon bond in Beta oxidation Step 1 + 2

S1 - There is the oxidation of Alpha and Beta Carbons as FADH2 is produced from FAD, this is to produce a C=C between alpha and Beta Carbon
S2 - Add water to the double bond in an addition reaction to break double bond and add Oxygen to Beta Carbon by hydratase enzyme

What are Step 3+4 for beta oxidation

S3- There is another oxidation reaction to remove the hydrogen from the Beta carbon as NAD become NADH to then go to ETC
S4- There is thyolysis to then break a bond with a thiol group with the enzyme thiolase, to then lead to production of acyl CoA at the end to then start the process again

Each cycle of beta oxidation produces 1 acetyl CoA + 1 NADH and 1 FADH2

How does Beta oxidation happen with a polyunsaturated fatty acid

There will need to be a isomerase to then convert cis double bond to a trans double bond ans change position of the C=C bond to then make the product made from 1st step of Beta oxidation reaction

When are Ketone bodies made

This is when the conditions of prolonged starvation and so high level of triglyceride hydrolysis and so more fatty acids and so can get excess FA that cant be stored so liver turn them to Ketone bodies

What are Ketone bodies

They are smaller fragments of Fatty acids and are more soluble and easier to transport around the body especially to the heart
They need very little conversion to get to the TCA cycle as they are similar to acetly CoA

What is Ketogenesis

There are 3 acetly CoA that are joined together due to the excess of them and this is done by reversing the final step of Beta oxidation
This product can then be broken down to acetone that cant be use for energy and is lost by sweating

The other products acetoacetate and Beta Hydroxybutyrate can be used for energy in the body

How is energy collected from the products of Ketogenesis

Convert the Beta Hydroxybutyrate to acetoaceatate
This can then be converted to Acetoacetly CoA by: Succinyl CoA will go to succinate as well as use the enzyme B Ketoacyl transferase

Acetoacetly CoA can then be fed to the TCA cycle to then get energy

Acetone cant be converted to Acetoacetate so has no energy purposes

What is fatty acid anabolism

This is the reverse of fatty acid catabolism but there are different enzymes and co-enzymes used
NAD and FAD are used for breaking things down and then NADH is for building things up

What is the start process of fatty acid anabolism

The start point is with acetly CoA and it will end with palmitic acid and the process used is almost a reverse of Beta oxidation so can be called Beta reduction

What is used to grow the fatty acid chain in anabolism

There is no joining of acetyl CoA together to grow the fatty acid chain byut instead there is the use of malonyl A

How is Malonyl A produced

Malonly A is produced due to:
Acetyl CoA + ATP + HCO3- --> Malonyl CoA + ADP + Pi + H+

The acetly CoA is carboxylated due to the carboxyl ion that donate carbon to make a 3 Carbon compound

The enzyme Acetly CoA Carboxylase is used for this but is inhibited by palmitic acid, glucagon and adrenaline but is stimulated by citrate and insulin and is an irreversible reaction

How is the fatty acid chain extended

This is done by Fatty acid Synthase and the chain will grow 2 Carbon at a time
This is due to there being a 3C malonly CoA added to an acetyl CoA to make a 4 Carbon fatty acid chain + 1CO2 molecule released to then drive the reaction to create the bond between the 2 carbon compounds

Why is acetly CoA exported to the Cytoplasm

The fatty acid synthase + acetly CoA carboxylase are both located in the cytoplasm but the acetly CoA is made and stored in the matrix of the mitochondria

How is acetly CoA exported to the cytoplasm

It will react to form oxaloacetate citrate as part of the TCA cycle due to there being a citrate transporter in mitochondria membrane
Then in the cytoplams the citrate is broken down to the acetly CoA and oxaloacetate that can then be reduced to malate by NADH oxidation

What does Malate do in the cytoplasm

It can be converted to Pyruvate due to NADP+ reduction to then form NADPH and the decarboxylation of Co2
Pyruvte is then fed into the link reaction to then re-enter the mitochondria

What is fatty acid Synthase

It is a collection of 6 different enzymes that have joined to form 1 multidomain enzyme that has 6 active sites, this is due to their genes have become joined together over evolutionary time
There is an acly carrier protein and an extendable arm to transfer products between the different active sites

The very bottom domain are used for bond making between acetly CoA and Malonyl CoA and the top domains are for modyfying their functions

What is step 1 of the fatty acid anabolsim pathway

The making of C=C bond between the acetly CoA and Malonly CoA, in the first 2 active sites of the enzyme
There are sulphide groups where a group can be attached and then remove it after the process

There is an acetyl added to the KS enzyme via ACP arm anbd MAT enzyme and then the malonly group tranferred onto ACP arm by MAT enzyme

KS enzyme the join both acetly and malonyl together to form 4 C compound due to CO2 also made to drive the process

What are steps 2-4 of the fatty acid anabolism pathway

Step 2 is the reduction stage
Step 3 is the dehydration stage

Step 4 is another reduction stageaqnd they all work to turn a C=O into a CH2 molecule on the Beta Carbon

The final product made is Butyryl ACP + 2NADP+ + H2O

What is the elongation step of fatty acid anabolism

This process keeps happening where the finshed product is recycled back to the KS enzyme for S1 to happen again
This is done until the 16C long to make Palmitic acid that is then released by enzyme thioesterase by breka ther bond with ACP arm

In Mammary tissue there is different thioesterase so cleaves off a shorter fatty acid to go into milk to make it easier for the baby to digest

How are lipids stored and transported

In an anabolic state the new fatty acids will be converted to triglycerides and then stored as these
If they are stored in the liver then lipoproteins are used to export the triglycerides to adipose and other types of tissue

Lipoprotein will vary depending on the surface proteins that they have on their shell

What are the types of lipoproteins

Chlyomicrons, very low denstiy lipoprotein, intermediate density lipoprotein, low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein

What will determine the density of a given lipoprotein

The largerthe lipoprotein then the lower the density of it and if they are denser then they will be smaller sized lipoprotein
All of the larger lipoprotein will offload cargo and unload some proteins and be converted to a smaller lipoprotein except for HDL

The Chylomicrons are much larger than liver lipoproteins but have the shortest life span due to being the largest

What is gluconeogenesis

It is the synthesis of new glucose from other non carbohrdate molecules

Why is gluconeogenesis important

This is due to in absence of insulin most of theb body need fatty acid for energy as have no mitochondria but brain and blood need glucose for TCA cycle
Glycogen stores in the liver are limited and muscles cant release glucosee from glycoegn to the blood

Gluconeogenesis is needed for long term survival if no food available

How to make new glucose when low blood glucose levels

The best way is to convert FA to glucose due to large stores of Fatty acid in the body but we dont have the necassary enzyme to be able to do this
There is then the option to reverse the 3 irreversible steps of glycolysis by using ,6 ATP

How to reverse the 1 irriversible step of glycolysis

Pyruvate will need to be converted to PEP by the first enzyme Pyruvate Carboxylase along with Co2 to produce OAA that then will combine with the enzyme PEP Carboxykinase and GTP to then make the PEP
Overall reaction = Pyruvate + Co2 + ATP + GTP ==> PEP + Co2 + ADP + GDP

PEP is a 3 Carbon compound

This take place in the cytoplasm so need to use Malate shuttle tranfer to move the OAA into cytoplasm for 2nd stage

What is the the 2n irriversible step of glycolysis

This is where fructose 1,6 bisphosphate is converted to Fructose 6 Phosphate and will use the enzyme Fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase
There is the hydrolysis of the 1 of the 2 phosphate groups and happens in the cytoplasm

How to reverse the 3rd irreversible step of glycolysis

This is where glucose 6 phosphate will be converted to glucose as their is the hydrolysis of the phosphate group by the enzyme glucose 6 phosphatase in the ER
Glucose 6 phosphate cant cross the cell membrane so tissues without the phosphatase cant export glucose out of them during gluconeogenesis

What is the solution to having no Pyruvate stores in the body

Lactate is produced in cells that dont have mitochondria so dont feed pyruvate to the TCA cycle but instead use the Cori Cycle
Amino acids can also be used

What is the Cori Cycle

This is where in some tissues the glucose is fed to then make pyruvate and then that will produce lactate rather than going to the TCA cycle.
The lactate can then be used to be converted back to pyruvate that can then be used to make glucose

There is a low ATP usage until turning pyruvate to Glucose due to have to undo the 3 irreverisble steps of glycolysis

What are the glucogenic amino acids

These are all the amino acids that can be used to make glucose and the others that cant are used to make jetone bodies so are called ketogenic amino acids

Why is Alanine the most important amino acid for making glucose

Alanine is important for making glucose as alanine is released from the catabolism of muscles that havnt eaten for a while and alanine is released as they are broken down and this can then be converted to pyruvate

How is alanine converted to pyruvate

This is done by the enzyme alanine aminotranferase and at the same time in a side reaction there is alpha Ketoglutarate being converted to glutamate
The pyruvate can then be used to make glucose

There is the ability to combine the alanine and the cori cycle with an overall cost of 10ATP of glucose

How is glycerol used in gluconeogenesis

In the body there is an enzyme to convert glycerol to glucose to then be releases
This is an overall better method due to an energy balance of only 1 ATP used and 1 NADH made so will make more energy in the process

How is glycerol converted to glucose

Glycerol is turned to Glycerol 3 phosphate by the enzyme Glycerol Kinase
This is then turned to Dihydroxyacetone phosphate by glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase

This can then be turned to glucose in gluconeogenesis or then turned to glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate that is fed into the glycolsis reversal method

How are other sugars used to make new glucose and enter gluconeogenesis process

Fructose is converted to G3P and in non liver tissues to G6P
Mannose can also enter process as G6P by being turned to mannos 6 phosphate then G6P

Galactose will enter one stage above G6P by using galactokinase to make G1P then use UDP Glucose to make UDP galactose to make glucose 1 phosphate to then make G6P

What happens to excess amino acids in the body

There are no amino acids to be stored in the body and then they cant be lost in the urine due to being too valuable

What is the nitrogen balance

Most of the nitrogen in the body is in amino acids so the Nitrogen balance refers to the number of amino acids
There is an amino pool of free amino acids that are used to make proteins as well as equal protein degradation to refill the amino acid pool

The pool get bigger if eat more protein but wont get bigger due to break down of amino acids

Where do amino acids go to

They are being used in protein synthesis, the dirtect use of the amino acid and also for the breakdown and redeployment elsewhere in the body
They can be used as neurotransmitters and also hormones

Why cant amino acids be broken down to ammonia

This is due to ammonia being toxic and so what happen is that the amino acids are converted to alpha ketoglutarate via transamination and then these are converted to Glutamate
Any ammonia produced is converted to urea in the liver and extrected in the urine

What is transamination

This is where all amino acids are turned to alpha ketoglutarate which is then converted to Glutamate due to the gaining of an amino group with the enzyme aminotransferase
The actual amino acid is then made into a alpha ketoacid

How does the amino acid change the product of transamination

There may be a different product instead of a Ketoacid formed
Asparatoic acid break down will lead to oxaloacetate and alanine will lead to pyruvate being formed

There is the overall production of glutamate no matter what due to the use of V6 prosthetic group PLP to move the amino group as intially the amino group added to alpha ketoglutartae that then lose amino to make glutamte

What is deamination

This is where the amino group that funneled to glutamate is then removed to then make alpha ketoglutare
This is done by adding water and then reducing NAD+ and the removal of NH4+ to then go to the urea cycle

It will be activated by ATP and inhibited by GTP

What is urea synthesis

Co2 + NH4 + H2O + 2ATP in the mitochondria
This will use the enzyme carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 and lead to the prodiction of Carbamoyl phosphate + 2ADP + 2Pi

What is the urea cycle

This is where carbamoyl phosphate is fed into the cycle and it will first lose the phosphate group to form citruline
This will then be converted to argino succinate due to the additon of arginine and then ATP will be hydrolyised to AMP

The succinate is then removed to leave just arginine where then the urea is then removed from the arginine to leave Ornithine to then combine with carbamoyl phosphate to restart the cycle

Why cant be urea be removed by the liver

This is due to tghe 4ATP cost to produce a urea molecule and so it it less efficient to add to the urine to remove
The urea cyckle will compensate this due to the Carbon Skeleton production

What is extraphatic tissue

This is tissue that will be catabolise amino acids to NH3 but wont make urea as they will reverse the deamination process due to add NH3 to make glutamate from a-ketoglutarate
There is then the option to add NH3 to glutamate to make glutamine and this is good as can remove 2 urea molecules

In the Kidney glutamine can be deaminated back to glutame to release NH3 into urine to then neutralise the urine acid

What does the breakdown of the carbon skeleton lead to

Lead to the production of Pyruvate, Acetly CoA, Acetoacetly Coa , alpha ketoglutamate, Succinyl CoA, Fumarate and oxaolacetate
This is all dependent of the type of amino acid used to make the carbon skeleton

How are sulfur amino acids broken down and disposed of

Cysteine and Methione both have Sulfur in their R group and can remove the amino acid just the same way as normal
For methione it is turned to Cysteine so making methione is an essential amino acid can cysteine is not as can be made from other amino acids

How is Cysteine broken down

It has the Carbon Skeleton of Pyruvate so has the amino and the sulfur to remove to then produce pyruvate
There are 2 pathways that both will lead to the production of the pyruvate

1= Cys goes to B-mercaptopyruvate tpo then go to pyruvate

2= Cys goes to Cysteinsulphinayte that then go to B sulphinylpyruvate that then go to pyruvate

Both are transamination processes

What are esential amino acids

These are ones that cant be made in our body so have to eat them to get them in the body and there are 9 of them
The other 11 can be made from other processes

What is the rate determing step

This is the slowest recation of the pathway and will determine the overall flux through the pathway by acting as a bottleneckl
Usually the 1st unqiue enzyme in a pathway is the rate determing step and in a branched pathway this will happen after the branch so then the products are made independent of each other so then will be deliberate slowed down to allow independent products to be made

How do you find the rate determing step

Can measure the Vmax of all enzyem in the pathway as lowest may be the RLS
Compare the equilibirum constant and the Mass action ratio and if they arent the same then the cell is modifying the the reaction so will be the RLS

Test if step is at the crossover point that will identify the regulatory step and if pathway flux increases then the enzyme has also increased so must be the RLS

Why is enzyme control needed

To ensure that the pathway is active when the product is needed and so that competing pathways are simulataeneously acitve as may need both for same reactant
Ensures that co-ordinated activoty in multiple pathways

Why is glycolysis and gluconeogenesis bad at the same time

Due to very energy costly due to the Futile cycle between F6P and F1,6P where ATP is hydrolysed to add a phsophate that is then lost in other direction
Neither of the process are completed due to both being a cycle and this may be used on cold days to help raise body temp in small organisms

What are the types of enzyme control

Intrinsic control by metaboliyes by changing metabolic cell activity via inhibitors and allosterism
Can have fast extrinsic control by covalent modification of hormones as well as slow extrinsic control by gene expression change of hormones

How is there control via metabolites

This can be either done by product inhibition or by allosterims which can be inhibitory or increase product production into another thing so then dont get full product if have too much of it can be used to make more

What is allosterism

If there is a side reaction if the original product is being produced too much
An example is if too much glucose 6 phosphate then there is a side reaction to make fructose 2,6 bisphosphate instead, this will the reactivate the enzyme phosphofructokinase to then restart fructose 1 phosphate production and also inactivate gluconeogenesis enzyme to make glucose 6 phosphate

What enzymes do ATP inhibit

PKF1 , Pyruvate dehydrogenase, citrate sythnase, isocitrae dehydrogenase, pyruvate kinase, a-ketoglutarte dehyodrgenase
Can also be then be activated by AMP,ADP

What can hormones alter

The activity of enzymes is rapid vai dephosphorylation of the enzyme and this is very short lived and much quicker
Can also change the number of enzymes which is slower due to change gene expression so change enzyme active site shape and this is long lived effect

How can there be control via phosphorylation

The phosphorylation can cause a conformational change of the enzyme that cause the inactivation of the enzyme
The phosphorylation will overide the any allosterism taking place

Phosporylase in muscles will be activated by AMP and inhibited by ATP and Glucose 6 phosphate

In glycogen synthesis there are 7 muscle phosphorylation sites and in the liver there are 7 and as 1 is made active the others are inactive

When is insulin released

When there is a high levels of blood glucose so need to store glucose and not break it down so does the opposite of adrenaline that makes glucose for the blood
It will stop the phosphorylation of glycogen synthase and active PP! to remove phosphate from glycogen synthase to allow glycogen production to store excess glucose

What is the difference between insulin and glucagon

Insulin will cause the dephosphorylation and glucagon cause phosphorylation
Insulin acitvate enzymes phosphorylase kinase + glucagon phosphorylase to then lead to increas in gluconeogenesis

There can be no fat broken down if insulin is present due to perilipin protein memrbane is round the the triglycerides

When there is adrenaline present then the perilipin is phosphorylated and then the lipase can access the triglycerides and break them down to fatty acids

What is the side reaction from glycolysis when fructose 1,6 bisphosphate is made

Fructose 6 phosphate is converted to fructose 2,6 bisphosphate due to the enzyme phospofructokinase 2 and fructobisphosphatase 2 will produve fructose 2,6 bisphosphate to then activate the enzyme needed to turn fructose 6 phosphate tp fructose 1,6 bisphosphate that is useful

How can phosphoryaltion regulate enzymes

When insulin is present the PFK2 is active to turn fructose 6 phosphate to fructose 2,6 bisphosphate and then when adrenaline is present there will be phosphorlyation of FBPase2 to make it active to then remake fructose 6 phosphate

How does multiple enzymes lead to greater control

Pyruvate will carry CoA then when the PDH Kinase is dephosphophorylated it will then release the CoA + ADP + NAD+
Then when the pyruvate is phosphorlyated it will lead to enzyme PDH phosphatase will then become active and so convert the pyruvate to carry acetyl CoA

ATP and NADH will go to the dephosphorylated pyruvate to inhibit the reaction and push reaction forward and activate PDH kinase

CoA,ADP,NAD+ inhiit PDH kinase to then limit forward reaction

What is AMP activated protein kinase

It will link the allosterism to phosphorylation and carry out both processes
It is an energy sensor when we are hungy and shift all the enzyme to survival mode as AMP is a trigger for hunger to make more ATP

It is able to phosporylate multiple targets like enzymes and transcription factors

How can there be control via expression

Transcription factors bind to genes and lead to an increased or decreased gene expression
If there are more enzymes so then Vmax and V will increase and vice versa as well

It can change the activation as transcription factors are receptors for metabolites so if they bind to metabolote lead to activation so then greater expression and if no metabolite bind then less gene expression

There can be phsophorylation of transcription factors that the lead to more gene binding

How does lipoprotein lipase work

This is done due to lipoprotein lipase will cleave off the the fatty acid that then enter the cell but there are low levels of enzymes in the blood on the muscle wall so then greater increase in fat level after eating

How does excerise effect muscle stress

If undergo excersie then there is muscle ill stress and be more short of energy so then this will lead to increase in the lipoprotein lipase on the capillaries so then more fatty acids will be cleaved off and used for energy purposes so less fat in the blood after excersize and eating

How does all 3 enzyme metabolic controls work as 1

This will lead to the highest level of control if allosteric, phosphorylation and gene expression are all being used at once

How does enzymes be indirectly regulated

Enzyme can be regulated indirectly due to dietary deficiency will lower Vmax and so the enzymes that need the vitamins to activate them wont be able to be turned on as quick so then lower Vmax of the enzymes, so too low enzyme activated concentrations
Can have dietary additions such as caffeine that is a purine and similar to adenine and guanine and can act as allosteric inhibitor or activator

how does the body decide if catabolic or anabolic state

This will be decided depending on the ATP levels of the body as ther are mutliple control tissues being used to decie this
Food molecules go to anabolic pathways and storage molecules for catabolic pathways and all used to recycle ATP and ADP

What are the tissues for anabolic state control

Brain - Wont store anything and wont export anything either
Liver - Storage of glycogen and Triglyceride and will ecport TG and glucose

Adipose tissue - Stores of TG and export glycerol and fatty acid

Muscles - Store of TG and carbohydrates and only export lactate during intense excersise

What are Metabolic tissue oddities

Heart- Preferred fuel of Ketone bodies not glucose
Eyrthrocytes – Only carry out glycolysis to generate lactate under all conditions

Cancer cells – They only carry out aerobic respiration to make lactate = Warburg effect

Kidneys- use 8g of lactate per day for ATP production

Intestines – Have a preferred fuel of glutamine as do the immune cells

Spermatozoa- Prefer a fuel of Fructose

What is the anabolic state

This will take place when we are eating and having the uptake of glucose where 60% to glycolysis, 10% for storage asnd 30% for TG production
Amino acid mainly go to make protein but some for carbon skeletons

Fatty acids all go to the production of triglycerides

What happens in storgage organs

There are higher levels Glycogenesis and Lipogenesis so there can be long term storage of glucose and fatty acids as glycogen and Triglycerides and so there is no energy wasted and there are high insulin levels In the high anabolic state

What happens if high glucose levels in the anabolic state

There will be high insulin levels that cause the liver to increas glycogenesis, decrease glycogenolysis, increase glycolysis, decrsse gluconeogenese and also more fatty acid synthesis

How does insulin effect other organs in anabolic state

Adipose tissue there will be more acetly CoA so then more fatty acids as well as lower lipolysis
In the liver there will be more glucokinase + Malic enzyme + ATP citrae lyase

What are Glucose transporters enzyme isotopes + Hexokminase isozymes

In most tissues
GLUT 1+3 has a low Km and HK1-3 has a low Km

This means take up glucose slowly and when there is low amount of glucose due to high affinity all the time

In the liver and Beta pancreas cells

GLUT 2 has high Km + HK 4 has high Km that cant be inhibited but glucose 6 phosphate

This means lower affinity so only take out glucose from the blood when very high blood glucose levels

In the muscle + Adipose tissue

There is GLUT 4 that has medium KM and is induced by insulin + HK 2 has a low Km

GLUT 4 is triggered by insulin and when its not there, there is no GLUT 4 channels so can only take up glucose when insulin is present so needs to be high blood glucose levels

What does insulin do to glucose

Insulin will turn glucose to Glucose adipose tissue as well as blocking fat breakdown this then means there will be more fat for the stores but then no fat will be lost in the strorage organs causing them to then swell up
It will ultimatly remove the ability to remove any fat stores

How can fructose corn syrup be used as sweetner instead of glucose

There is less glucose compared to sugar so then this will then cause there to be less insulin to be released so then leading to less fat storage and more fat will be broken down in storage organs
However due to fructose being metabolised quicker than glucose in the liver so then in the long term lead to greater levels of fat

What can fructose sweetners lead to as a replacement for glucose

Means that due to fructose being fed into glycolysis after the 2 slow points of glycolysis meaning then there is no more regulation of glycolysis after this
This then means you get greater levels of pyruvate building up leading to excess acetly CoA spo then there will be greater fatty acid and triglyceride synthesis so thne more fat being stored in organs so then overal a weight gain

What can alcoholsim cause

There will be a greater ethanol levels in the body that will cause more acetly CoA to be produced and there is no regukation of the due to no regulated enzymes and will happen quickly to remove ethanol from the bodhy
Due to no regulation the preffered method will get energy via the oxidation of ethanol leading to more NADH and less NAD+

Why is ethanol oxdiation bad caused from alcoholism

Due to more ethanol oxidation so then more NADH made and less NAD+ and this will then inhibit the TCA cycle as well as more lactate to increase so then pyruvate is inhibited so then the body enter an acidic state when higher ethanol levels and so there is more ATP used but glycolysis is inhibited and so then lead to less pyruvate and glucose being made leading to hypoglycemia
This then will cause less NAD+ and then B oxidation is inhibited so cant break down fatty acid to get energy and there are higher levels of acetly CoA so more triglyceride production leading to a fatty liver

How is ethanol converted to acetly CoA

Ethanol is converted to acetaldehyde by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase and NAD+ is reduced to NADH
This is then turned to acetate by aldehyde dehydrogenas and NADH is made

Acetate is then turned to acetly CoA by Acetly CoA synthetase

What is the catabolic state

This will happen when havnt eaten for a while and so low blood glucose levels so need to make glucose from other sources
Glucose in the blood for the brain but rest of the body will have to use fatty acid for energy in this state

What is the 1st metabolic priority

This is too maintain the blood glucose levels so the brain has enough glucose to make ATP for survival and this is done by releasing adrenaline and glucagon to trigger glucogenolysis and gluconeogenesis in the liver
There will also be lipolysis at the same time to provide rest of the body with ATP as well as to make glycerol so more gluconeogenesis

What is the catabolic response to long term fasting

Cortisol will be released that will lead to protein degradation to then increase gluconeogenesis for long term fasting

How does adrenaline act on muscles in the catabolic state

It will lead to less glycogen synthesase so less glycogenesis and also greater phosphorylase so more glycogenolysis
There will be more phosphofructokinase 2 so then more phosphofructose 1 so then quicker glycolysis and more glucose

Greater lipoproten lipase so more fatyy acid uptake from blood for more energy and there will be more hormone sensitive lipase in the adipose tissue so more lipolysis

How does adrenaline act on the liver in the catabolic state

There will be less glycogen synthase so less glycogenesis and also more glycogenolysis due to more phosphorylase
Lower rate of glycolysis due to less phosphofructokinase 2 but more fructose1,6 bisphosphate so then more gluconeogenesis

Less acetly CoA carboxylase so then stop malonly CoA so less fatty acid synthesis so less TCA cycle

What does glucogaon do in the catabolic state

It will do the same as adrenaline but for a long term effect and last longer
Also be lower glucokinase and stop glycolysis to preserve glucose levels

Also lower pyruvate kinase to stop pyruvate production for more gluconeogenesis to happen

Increase PEP carboxykinase so more gluconeogenesis as well as fructose 1,6 bisphosphate and glucose 6 phosphate to increase gluconeogenesis

Less Acetly CoA so then less fatty acid made and more ketone bodies will be made

What does cortisol do in the catabolic state

Increase PEP carboxykinase so more gluconeogenesis and an increase in amino acid catabolising enzymes so more amino acid breakdown to release more urea so more of the urea cycle takes place
Greater glycogen synthase so more glycogensis due to the limited levels of glycogen in the liver by the time cortisol is used and also due to extreme level of glucose so then get exfess that needs to be stored as glycogen

What is starvation as the 2nd metabolic priority

This will happen to preserve fucntional proteins and not break them so dont lose vital protein in the body
If fasting goes for long time then enter starvation by dropping the body glucose requirements

This can be done due to brain convert ketone bodies to ATP so then less need for glucose and lower usage of it

What does excersise do for catabolic pathways

There will be a sudden drop in ATP due to more muscle contraction
If short term intense activity the major ATP drop and then very large decrease in creatine phosphate to remake ATP and a gradual glucose increase to get energy

Possible to make ATP without the ETC and is much quicker

For long term excersie then use fatty acids and glycogen to provide energy fro muscle contraction but has to be done in anareobic condtions so get lactic acid build up

What is thermogenesis

This is the generation of heat from metabolic pathways via shivering and uncoupled respiration in animals
It is done by wasteful ATP usage so loss of energy as heat to keep core body temp stable

How does uncoupled respiration come about

Will happen due to the uncoupling of a protein called thermogenin to match thermogenesis as well as attaching fatty acid to amino acid

What is brown adipose tissue

This is a modified adipose tissue that is used to generate heat by wasting the energy that the are storing in fats by breaking down the triglycerides
Hibernating animals need to keep minimal body temp so they dont freeze inside so generate heat by metabolic pathways

How is brown adipose tissue different to white adipose tissue

There are many smaller triglyceride droplets in the cytoplasm as well as their being more mitochondria present
Also more sympathetic innervations so more noradrenaline leading to the uncoupling of ETC and ATP synthesis for thermogensis to happen

UCP1 is present when noradrenaline released and then they will be activated by free fatty acids and then open to allow proton to enter membrane so less proton renter and less ATP made so energy lost as heat

What does N-acly amino acids do in the catabolic state

In the mitochondria membrane there is an ATP/ADP translocase carrier so 1 ATP enter and 1 ADP leave, when this is the in the presence of N acyl amino acid it will become permeable to proteins as well
This means that Energy not being captured as ATO so then will be lost as heat energy

What is diabete

In a healthy person the glucose coming into the body will be diverted to the muscle, liver and adipose tissue
But before get diabetes the person will become insulin resistant which at the start glucose distribution is the same

But as conditions gets worse then the muscle stops taking up glucose and the liver will release glucose to the blood

This then means the adipose tissue is then taking up all excess glucose so then they swell and so gain weight is first sign of developing type 2 diabetes

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